Revision of Siobla (Hymenoptera, Tenthredinidae) from Japan
Author
Shinohara, Akihiko
Author
Wei, Meicai
Author
Niu, Gengyun
text
Zootaxa
2013
3746
1
1
40
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3746.1.1
b0793225-7b44-4309-bb0d-6aeaec577a12
1175-5326
285294
3F817722-7445-4B21-B364-B3C8DE423E0C
Siobla hirasana
Takeuchi, 1929
(
Figs 1
e–f, 4a–c, 5e–f, 6c, 7c, 8c, l, 10d, 11e–h)
Siobla ferox
var.
hirasana
Takeuchi, 1929: 497
.
Siobla ferox
: Yano, 1932: 438
(in part); Esaki
et al.
, 1939: 337 (in part); Takeuchi, 1952: 18 (in part); Togashi, 1965: 246 (in part), plate 123, 31; Naito, 1982: 574; Naito
et al.
, 2004: 56 (in part); Yoshida, 2006: 92 (in part); Togashi, 2008: 490 (in part), plate 142, 2539.
Siobla hirasana
: Malaise, 1945: 121
; Taeger
et al.
, 2010: 583; Niu & Wei, 2010: 49.
Siobla ferox
forma
hirasana
: Takeuchi, 1950: 1348
.
“
Siobla ferox
(F. Smith, 1874)
?”: Yoshida, 2006: 92 (in part).
Distribution
.
Japan
(Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu [new record]).
Primary
type
examined
.
Holotype
of
Siobla ferox
var.
hirasana
(
Fig. 4a–c
): ♀, “
22. VI. 1927
, Mt. Hira, Takeuchi” “
Siobla ferox
var.
hirasana
Takeuchi
,
Holotype
” (OPU). In the original description, the collection date of the
holotype
is noted “
June 22, 1928
”, whereas the label data attached to the
holotype
is “
22. VI. 1927
”. We regard the difference as a lapsus.
Other material examined
(see Appendix).
150 specimens
(58 ♀ and
92 ♂
).
Variation
. The length varies from 12.5 to 16.0 mm in the female and 10.5 to 14.0 mm in the male. The colouration shows slight variation. In the female, the antenna is brown with the four or five apical antennomeres always black and two basal antennomeres often partly black. The posterior margin of the pronotum and the mesoscutellum (except for the outer margin) are always pale brown. The mesoscutellar appendage is always black. The metascutellum sometimes has a small brown mark medially. The hind trochanter and trochantellus are always pale brown. The fore and mid femora vary from almost entirely brown to almost entirely black. The abdominal tergum 1 is black, often with an obscure brown spot laterally, but never with a brown posterior margin. The males usually have more black areas on the antenna and the thorax than the females, though the basal flagellomeres always remain mostly or entirely pale brown. In a few very dark males, the pale marking on the mesoscutellum is missing and the tegula is mostly blackish.
FIGURE 7.
Siobla
species, middle serrulae (same specimens as in Fig. 6). a.
S. apicalis
; b.
S. ferox
; c.
S. hirasana
; d.
S. japonica
sp. nov.
; e.
S. jucunda
; f.
S. metallica
; g.
S. pulchra
sp. nov.
;
h.
S. sturmii
; i.
S. takeuchii
sp. nov.
Scale bar = 100 Μm.
FIGURE 8.
Siobla
species, a–i. gonoforceps & j–r. penis valve. a, j.
S. apicalis
, N20130430A, Mt. Hayachine; b, k.
S. ferox
, N20131106G, Amagasa; c, l.
S. hirasana
, N20110108B (c) and N20130907C (l), Hikagezawa; d, m.
S. japonica
sp. nov.
, paratype, N20131105D, Marunuma; e, n.
S. jucunda
, N20130423D, Minoto; f, o.
S. metallica
, N20100313C, Kiyosato; g, p.
S. pulchra
sp. nov.
, paratype, N20131105B, Nakayama-toge; h, q.
S. sturmii
, N20130423C, Asahidake-onsen; i, r.
S. takeuchii
sp. nov.
, paratype, N20130901F, Mt. Kenashi-yama. Scale bar = 100 Μm.
Remarks
. This species was originally described as a variety of
S. ferox
(Takeuchi, 1929)
and has been mixed with it in collections.
Siobla hirasana
is a member of the
S. ferox
group defined by Niu & Wei (2010). The apically and often basally black and medially pale brown antenna of the female, the weakly convex mesoscutellum, the entirely black mesoscutellar appendage and metascutellum (sometimes with small pale mark) and the entirely or almost entirely black abdominal tergum 1 will separate
S. hirasana
from
S. ferox
.
The concept of
S. ferox
by Yano (1932), Esaki
et al.
(1939) and Takeuchi (1952) should include the present concept of
S. hirasana
. The female specimen shown by Togashi (1965) as
S. ferox
(
31 in
plate 123; also
2539 in
plate
142 in
Togashi, 2008) has basally and apically black antenna, a pale brown mesoscutellum, and an entirely black abdominal tergum 1. We were not able to locate Togashi’s specimen but it most probably belongs to
S. hirasana
. An examination of the specimens identified as
S. ferox
by Naito (1982) and Naito
et al.
(2004) has shown that at least part of them also belong to
S. hirasana
.